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Examples

  • Patentees and their lawyers are now addicted to a high-volume stream of easy-to-get patents.

    Patent Law, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty 2009

  • Patentees who compete should be entitled to the best estimate of lost profits, even if not all elements of proof are available.

    Patent Reform Crawling Back In 2008? Lemley Proposal For Damages May Provide Answers Peter Zura 2008

  • Patentees seeking to avoid patent exhaustion could simply draft their patent claims to describe a method rather than an apparatus.5 Apparatus and method claims "may approach each other so nearly that it will be difficult to distinguish the process from the function of the apparatus."

    B2fxxx 2008

  • Patentees who compete should be entitled to the best estimate of lost profits, even if not all elements of proof are available.

    Archive 2008-08-01 Peter Zura 2008

  • Patentees who would realize any considerable amount from their patents must not sit down and expect the other fellow to make money out of their inventions for them.

    Practical Pointers for Patentees Franklin Cresee

  • Patentees should carefully scrutinize all papers offered by the parties in whose favor they are drawn, and, if possible, he should have his attorney to examine them.

    Practical Pointers for Patentees Franklin Cresee

  • Andreas; twelve of their brethren were religiously selected by the emigrants as the _Patentees_, and known by the appellation of the '_Duzine_,' or the twelve patentees, and these were regarded as the patriarchs in this little Christian community.

    The Continental Monthly, Vol. 1, No. 3, March, 1862 Various

  • Patentees should not, of course, undervalue their patents, or accept the first small offer made for fear of not receiving another; at the same time, they should not fall into the common error of asking a price that cannot be obtained, which too frequently precludes all chances of a sale.

    Practical Pointers for Patentees Franklin Cresee

  • Patentees laboring under this disadvantage are frequently tempted to part with a small interest in their patents for the sake of securing sufficient funds to carry on the promotion of their inventions and sale of the patent; and in doing this the inexperienced patentee is apt to make the fatal mistake of assigning to another an undivided interest in his invention.

    Practical Pointers for Patentees Franklin Cresee

  • Patentees are sometimes offered securities or other property in trade for a patent.

    Practical Pointers for Patentees Franklin Cresee

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